Latest update: 23/04/2012 

- France - French elections 2012 - Marine Le Pen - National Front party (France)


Le Pen shocks France as far right hits historic heights

Far-right National Front candidate Marine Le Pen obtained a surprising 18% of the vote in the first-round of France’s presidential election Sunday night. But who will those votes go to in the second round?

By Sarah LEDUC (text)
 

Having secured nearly one in five votes cast in the first round of France’s presidential election on Sunday, far right National Front candidate Marine Le Pen has the potential to swing what is likely to be a close second round on May 6.

But for the moment, Marine Le Pen is not asking her supporters to choose between incumbent centre-right President Nicolas Sarkozy or Socialist challenger François Hollande. Instead, she is basking in the glory of her surprisingly strong showing – more than 18% of the vote – and touting her party’s central message: that the two main parties interchangeably represent the “elite”, while she is the one true alternative to the status-quo in French politics.

“Tonight is historic,” Le Pen gushed to her supporters gathered in the 15th district of Paris on Sunday. “We are the only opposition to the ultra-liberal, libertarian left-wing.”

Smiling and putting her hand to her heart, the National Front leader led the room in singing the French national anthem. A little girl, carried away by the festive atmosphere on election day, ran through the crowds carrying a tricoloured flag.

Syndicate contentFrench elections 2012

Across the room, Jean-Marie Le Pen, the aging former leader of the party (and father of Marine) looked on with pride. “This is the start of a long road to a future victory,” he told a group of journalists. “Marine is the only one offering a path of change.”

Marine, the face of the new far right

More than 500 supporters came out to celebrate Le Pen’s strong first-round showing on Sunday night. Couples, families, and groups of friends brandishing “Marine for President” banners and decked out in “I Love Marine” pins and red-white-and-blue outfits and makeup, sipped white wine.

The mood was one of pride and accomplishment. “Marine defends the values and traditions of France. That’s why I voted for her,” said 22-year-old Jérémie. “I handed out pamphlets, I did everything I could, and it paid off.”

A more seasoned National Front loyalist, 42-year-old Jean-Christophe, explained his reasons for supporting the candidate. “I’m against legalising immigrants without papers, no exceptions….We’re not able to welcome them properly, so we should offer them aid in their own countries,” he said.

Others were eager to point Marine Le Pen as a symbol of an evolving, more inclusive far-right party. Whereas her father, who acted as party president from 1972 to 2011, was known for inflammatory racist and anti-Semitic statements, Marine ran a campaign tightly focused on economic protectionism and an exit from the Eurozone.

“People need to stop calling us fascists, Nazis, and racists – it’s ridiculous,” exclaimed Carl, aged 46, from Corsica. “I like everyone, no matter what the colour of their skin is!”

A 'turning point' in French politics?

According to her supporters, Le Pen’s historically strong performance Sunday night catapults her to the centre of the French political scene, making her a force that cannot be ignored by Sarkozy, Hollande, and their respective parties.

“It’s a major turning point in French politics,” said Marion Maréchal-Le Pen, Marine Le Pen’s niece. “The candidates in the second round will be obligated to consider our policy proposals and solutions.”

Le Pen is expected to clarify her position on the second-round face-off on May 1, just days before the final vote on May 6. National Front Vice-President Louis Alliot suggested on Monday that Le Pen would not formally endorse either candidate "as things stand".

But some National Front voters may feel they have no other option. Antoine, a 46-year-old Corsican, said that his priority was to prevent the left from taking over the presidency and therefore guaranteeing France “a future like that of Greece”. He, as well as the four friends who accompanied him Sunday night, will therefore vote – grudgingly – for Sarkozy.

Others will stay home. “Sarko and Hollande are the same,” one Le Pen supporter told France24.com. “They’re both defenders of executives and big bosses, not the working class – unlike Marine. I’ll stay in bed for the second round.”

According to a poll published by Ipsos, a French market research company, 18% of National Front voters will vote for Hollande in the second round, while 60% will opt for Sarkozy.

22%, however, have not yet decided.

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It's time for the RIGHT

It's time for the RIGHT change ;). Swing to the RIGHT France.

HOPE

THERE IS HOPE FOR FRANCE ONCE AGAIN--- MARINE LE PEN

Le Pen getting a large percent of French vote

Why, oh why do people refuse to use history as a guide for the future? Austerity is what brought us WWII...it is happening again before our eyes and all refuse to see it...Austerity does NOT work.

Election

Why don't you frogs just get Hugo Chavez to run your disfinctional government. At least he doesn't surrender as fast as you dolts.

Why would it matter?

Le Pen's supporters no doubt view a choice between Sarkozy and Hollande as a choice between a turd sandwich and a crap wrap.

As a Ron Paul Supporter, I will be voting for .... Ron Paul in the election, because there is no difference between Romney and Obama on any issue of any importance.

I'm sure a similar feeling is spreading there

Values and traditions

"Marine défend les valeurs et les traditions de la France". I would like to know what those are, explicitly and clearly.Not liberté,égalité, fraternité? What does French identity mean? Do you really know? Maybe Pétain could explain it to me.
As for Americans posting here, they have absolutely NO idea what Socialism and Communism mean.

One thing I thank the muslim victim hordes for is

that I have now woken up to the insanity of supporting their useful idiot bed fellows on the left of the political spectrum. Vive a free and democratiic France!

This just in: 18% of french

This just in: 18% of french shocked to learn they voted for LePen. Another 32% shocked to learn that their friends did what they told them all the time.

marine le pen

Perhaps it is time for the French to try something different? Le Pen won't have all the answers for what ails French society but she may take the nation down a better path than Sarkozy or Hollands. They and the philosophy they espouse are already known and have been tried and failed. Le Pen will guarantee at least one thing for France...it will remain French. She will see to it that immigrants (especially Muslim immigrants) will not supercede the native French population. That alone should make her the next President.

Second-Round Prognostication

I predict that Sarkozy will keep his job in a very tight race. Nobody who voted for LePen is going to vote for Hollande, so Sarkozy starts out with his 26% plus LePen's 18.5% = 44.5%.

Meantime, Hollande can count on his 28% and all or most of Melenchon's 14% = 42%.

Voters who profess sour grapes will swallow their various prejudices and vote the ticket that most closely conforms to their world view.

That leaves 13.5% "middle-of-the-road" voters who will swing this election one way or the other. The issue that will decide the election is immigration, and Hollande's open-door policy will not sit well with these voters.

Why the left is trumpeting victory is beyond me. They will lose.

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